Les Avenières


Les Avenières is a former commune in the Isère department in the Rhône-Alpes region of south-eastern France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Les Avenières-Veyrins-Thuellin.
The inhabitants of the commune are known as Avenièrants or Avenièrantes.

Geography

Les Avenières lies on the left bank of the Rhône as it loops north some 25 km east by north-east of Bourgoin-Jallieu and 25 km west by north-west of Chambéry. The Rhone river forms the north-eastern border of the commune and is also the border between Isère and Ain departments. Access to the commune is by road D450 from Veyrins-Thuellin in the south-west which goes to the village then continues south-east to Saint-Genix-sur-Guiers. The D33 goes from Morestel in the north-west and passes through the north of the commune and across the Rhône bridge where it becomes the D10 and goes north-east to join the D19. The D40B goes north from the village to join the D33. The D40E connects the D40 at the eastern edge of the commune to the D40B. Apart from the village there are the hamlets of Le Chamolay, Curtille, Le Grand Chaffard, Le Maitre, Le Bessey, Le Sablonnet, and Les Nappes. The commune has a large forest in the north-east on the Île Molettes with a large urban area in the centre mixed with farmland, and in the south mixed forest and farmland.
The north-western border of the commune consists entirely of a left branch of the Rhône river as it loops north on its course through Lyon south to the Mediterranean. The Grand Canal de l'Huert forms the south-western border of the commune which curves to join the Huert river which is part of the northern border of the commune. The Canal du Champ forms the southern border of the commune where it connects the Grand Canal de l'Huert to the Bièvre river which forms the south-eastern border of the commune flowing north-east to join the Rhône.

Neighbouring communes and villages

Toponymy

The name Avenières is derived from the Franco-Provençal avena meaning "oats".

History

Prehistory

From the late Neolithic to the middle Bronze Age the region was inhabited by farmers. A scythe found in Les Avenières region is preserved in the Vienne Museum. It is the only evidence of human occupation before the Gallo-Romans. It was found at the confluence of the Bièvre and the Rhône.

Roman Era

In 1989 maintenance work undertaken in the La Cour du Pont district led to the discovery of two oak piles at a depth of 2 metres. A Carbon-14 study undertaken by the centre for chronology at the Claude Bernard University Lyon 1 gave a date between 39 BC and 120 AD. It is possible that they were piles for a Gallo-Roman bridge used to cross the Rhone between Les Avenières and Thuellin.

From the Middle Ages to modern times''General catalogue of manuscripts in public libraries in France: Departments'', 1903, Vol. LXI

At the beginning of the 20th century the town was served two secondary railways: the Chemin de fer de l'Est de Lyon to Lyon and Aosta, and the Tramways départementaux de l'Isère, which was taken over by Tramways de l'Ouest du Dauphiné, to La Tour-du-Pin. This last operated from 1909 to 1935.

Administration

List of Successive Mayors
FromToName
18001801Pierre Guiguet
18011804Louis Bayet
18041805Benoît Varnet
18051815Jacques Pelisson
18151815François Charvet
18151818Joseph Bourjaillat
18181830François Reynaud
18301842Joseph Mesly
18421847Louis Charvet
18471856Marie-Joseph Jacquier
18561860Joseph Orcel
18601870Louis Henri Guiguet
18701871Xavier Mesly
18711873Louis Henri Guiguet
18731874Eugène Perriolat
18741884Edouard Marion
18841888François Berlioz
18881891Edouard Marion
18911896Adrien Mesly
18961912Claude Cattoz
19121925Maurice Rullier
19251941Antonin Chabert

;Mayors from 1941
FromToNamePartyPosition
19411944André Liard
19441945Eugène Satonnet
19451947Jean Bourde
19471965Emile Richerd
19651980Jean Bedet
19801989Marius Louis Monnet
19891993Roger Gagneux
19931995Aimé Chaboud
19952001Emile Vasquez
20012014Gilbert Mergoud
20142020Daniel Michoud

Demography

In 2010 the commune had 5,430 inhabitants. The evolution of the number of inhabitants is known from the population censuses conducted in the commune since 1793. From the 21st century, a census of communes with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants is held every five years, unlike larger communes that have a sample survey every year.

Culture and heritage

Civil heritage